Dog poo fines among war on terror benefits

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Triple digit silver kook
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By USA Today

LONDON — Millions of security cameras throughout Britain aimed to combat terrorism and crime also catch litterbugs, parking violators and, oops, doggy doo left on the grass.
Britons complain that local officials use the cameras to prosecute petty offenses.


The latest outrage came last month when a dog owner in Bristol, England, was fined for "dog fouling" after being shown pictures of his mixed collie, Mitzy, squatting in a grassy commons area. The owner, Paul Griffiths, was fined $320 and ordered to pay $1,760 after failing to appear in court.
"We're the most monitored society in the world," says Jen Corlew, spokeswoman for Liberty, a civil liberties group in London. "And we're very concerned there's abuse of this."
Britain has 4.2 million surveillance cameras — 20% of the world's closed circuit cameras, according to the nation's independent Information Commissioners Office. There is a camera for every 14 people. An average Londoner is captured on camera 300 times a day, the office reported.

The case of Mitzy isn't the only example:
• In the Borough of Poole on England's south coast, the cameras tracked a family to see whether members had lied about their address to get a child into a preferred school in a neighboring area. They hadn't.
• London's Westminster City Council called for a review of its 250 cameras after people argued about unwarranted parking tickets and helped drive up complaints 13% against the council in the first quarter of this year.
• London's Borough of Chelsea and Kensington used the cameras to catch a man sporting his mother's disabled parking sticker to evade more than $25,000 in parking fees.
In a spring survey by the Press Association news agency, local councils acknowledged turning cameras on those who violate ordinances for cleaning up after dogs, littering, benefit fraud, dumping waste and underage alcohol sales.
Police use the cameras to help track suspects of serious crimes such as murder and assault.
Corlew says the number of local authorities who use the surveillance for minor offenses "is quite shocking."
"There's other, less-intrusive ways of stopping an individual who is a dog fouler," she says.
Simon Milton, chairman of the Local Government Association, warned councils in England and Wales last month that they risk alienating the public by "overzealous" use of cameras.
"Our advice is that save in the most unusual and extreme circumstances, it is inappropriate to use these powers for trivial matters," he wrote in a letter to council leaders.
Ken Jones, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, issued a similar warning last week. He told police chiefs that abusing surveillance powers causes "widespread unease" in the public and needs to be stopped.
The councils have defended their usage of the cameras, as in the case of Mitzy's owner.
Griffiths, 48, told the Bristol Evening Post that his dog only urinated. Camera images showed the dog squatting and nothing else, he said.
Bristol Councilor Judith Price said in a written statement, "It may seem easier at the time to walk away from the dog mess, but if you get caught, you will be fined."

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Eek, looking like you better potty train that hound you got before walking it around town.



:cripwalk:
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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DAWOOF, good thread in Offshore for "OT: Post pics of your pets"

I set it up on a tee for ya
 

Pro Handi-Craper My Picks are the shit
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Only in britian but soon in America vote Obamma for a worthless nation.
 

Is that a moonbat in my sites?
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By USA Today

LONDON — Millions of security cameras throughout Britain aimed to combat terrorism and crime also catch litterbugs, parking violators and, oops, doggy doo left on the grass.
Britons complain that local officials use the cameras to prosecute petty offenses.


The latest outrage came last month when a dog owner in Bristol, England, was fined for "dog fouling" after being shown pictures of his mixed collie, Mitzy, squatting in a grassy commons area. The owner, Paul Griffiths, was fined $320 and ordered to pay $1,760 after failing to appear in court.
"We're the most monitored society in the world," says Jen Corlew, spokeswoman for Liberty, a civil liberties group in London. "And we're very concerned there's abuse of this."
Britain has 4.2 million surveillance cameras — 20% of the world's closed circuit cameras, according to the nation's independent Information Commissioners Office. There is a camera for every 14 people. An average Londoner is captured on camera 300 times a day, the office reported.

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Eek, looking like you better potty train that hound you got before walking it around town.


As ye sow, so shall ye reap-

Anyone who thinks the liberal mindset isn't big-brother at his worst is nuts. They're all elitists who truely believe they know what is best for the rank and file.

Welcome to Soylent Green and 1984.
 

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Pat that's the best collection of eek's posts I've ever seen. All gathered in one pic!
 

Triple digit silver kook
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eek, you can scratch Boise, Idaho off your list of places to visit.

Police go undercover on dog poop patrol

Annual surveys indicate that dog issues are a top concern among Boise residents.

BY KATY MOELLER

Boise police tried to crack down on dog owners who flout the city's dog leash and poop pickup laws Tuesday, but an early-morning rain storm apparently kept many away from the parks. Four citations were issued in the first two and a half hours of the focused patrol, according to Boise Police Sgt. Paul Burch, who leads the neighborhood contact officer unit. They began observing park users at about 7:30 a.m.
The eight neighborhood officers who targeted North End parks were in plain clothes to avoid tipping off the scofflaws.
"The truth of the matter is ... people actually get out of their cars, look around with their dogs on leash, then they unclip them and let them run amok," Burch said.
Members of the group Boise Trail DOG and regular users of the Foothills, including North End resident Jodi Peterson, have been trying to educate dog owners about their responsibilities.
A week and a half ago, Peterson announced a new leash-lending program that would make leashes available at kiosks at a half dozen trailheads.
Burch said police did a focused patrol Tuesday because of the volume of complaints recently about people letting their dogs off leash in leash-only areas and not picking up dog poop.
He noted that annual community surveys show that dog issues are a top concern among Boise residents.
Boise police's bike patrol issued 83 off-leash dog citations in city parks and along the Greenbelt last year. That's a five-year low in annual citations issued, according to police data. There were 141 citations issued in 2005.
Burch speculated that more citations were issued in 2005 because more people complained that year.
"Complaints drive our enforcement," Burch said. "If we get a lot of complaints about something, we respond to the needs of the community."
The fine for each violation in city parks is $25 plus court costs, bringing the total to $66.50.
Anywhere else in the city, a dog at large violation is a misdemeanor, which means dog owners are summoned to court. The penalty is set by the judge.
Zet Castets, a North End resident who regularly walks her dog at Camel's Back Park, noticed that there were four or five piles of dog poop in the grassy area of the park Tuesday.
She keeps her waistpack stuffed with green dog poop bags to clean up after her 3 year old dog, an Australian shepherd-border collie mix named Voyou (French for "little rascal").
"Some are responsible, but not everybody," said Castets, a native of France who has lived in Boise for the past couple years. "Some people don't pay attention. They don't care. We all have to do our share."


TICKETS ISSUED

Boise police bicycle patrol citations issued for dogs off leash in city parks and along the Greenbelt.*

2003: 130
2004: 98
2005: 141
2006: 122
2007: 83

*Does not include citations written by patrol officers or dog at large misdemeanor tickets issued in the rest of the city.
Source: Boise Police Department



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Edit: Special note added about dog issues being a TOP concern for Boise residents? Must be a boring, but safe place if dog poo is a top concern.




:ears:
 

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